Isabel Refugee Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Isabel Refugee. Here they are! All 5 of them:

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They traveled deep into far-flung regions of their own country and in some cases clear across the continent. Thus the Great Migration had more in common with the vast movements of refugees from famine, war, and genocide in other parts of the world, where oppressed people, whether fleeing twenty-first-century Darfur or nineteenth-century Ireland, go great distances, journey across rivers, desserts, and oceans or as far as it takes to reach safety with the hope that life will be better wherever they land.
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Isabel Wilkerson (The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration)
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Hundreds of thousands of terrified refugees were escaping to France, where a campaign of fear and hatred awaited them.
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Isabel Allende (A Long Petal of the Sea)
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After the Spanish Civil War, refugees came to Chile escaping the defeat. In 1939, the poet Pablo Neruda, at the direction of the Chilean government, chartered a ship, the Winnipeg, which sailed from Marseilles carrying a cargo of intellectuals, writers, artists, physicians, engineers, and fine craftsmen.
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Isabel Allende (My Invented Country: A Nostalgic Journey Through Chile)
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…one of the coasts of a country that was a lifeboat, and that lifeboat was under siege by people who wanted to be taken on board. She thought to the southern shores of Italy and the boats that came up from the south, crammed with the desperate of North Africa striving to get into Europe. The vessels capsized under their human cargo; there were people in the water, their dream coming to a watery end. How could one turn one’s face against all of that? What sort of person would one have to be to sail past?
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Alexander McCall Smith (The Novel Habits of Happiness (Isabel Dalhousie, #10))
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Thus the Great Migration had more in common with the vast movements of refugees from famine, war, and genocide in other parts of the world, where oppressed people, whether fleeing twenty-first-century Darfur or nineteenth-century Ireland, go great distances, journey across rivers, deserts, and oceans or as far as it takes to reach safety with the hope that life will be better wherever they land.
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Isabel Wilkerson (The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration)